The Old Monk in a Theater Concert There Is No More Room For
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The Old Monk in a Theater Concert Marta Isaacsson Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul - UFRG, Brazil Old age is inevitable, we can only accept it, but resistance is the spice of life. I wanted to create a show that spoke of aging, body usury, but also the desire to continue to dance or dance again.1 Josse de Pauw There is no more room for ontological preciousness. Contemporary theater ex- pands its presence in different territories and acquires the most diverse guises, thanks to formal rapprochement with the other arts, and by exploring new ten- sions between the theatrical means common to it and the incorporation of new technological devices. This is an artistic process strongly invested in by the Flem- ish experimental stage, whose creations enchant the public of different festivals and also arouse the interest of leading researchers. It was, among others, this northern Belgian stage that drew the attention of Hans-Thies Lehmann in the late nineties and became the object of analysis behind the German critic’s study of the so-called “post-dramatic theater.” More recently, a dossier of the journal Théâtre/ Public No. 211, organized by Christian Biet and Josette Féral, gathered articles from Belgian and French scholars dedicated to the inventive and provocative stage called “the Flemish wave.” Although critical interest in Flemish productions has been growing in the last 15 years, experimental Flemish theater has been flourishing from the late ‘70s, with productions committed to the renewal of theater, dance and music, flirting heavily with performance. In this creative birthing, we in Brazil can already confirm the talent of artists such as Jan Lauwers (Needcompany), Jan Fabre (Troubleyn) and 1 Interview with Wannes Gyselinck. ARJ | Brazil | V. 3, n. 1 | p. 171-181 | Jan. / Jun. 2016 ISAACSSON | The Old Monk 172 ISSN 2357-9978 Anne Therese Keersmaeker (Rosas). After more than three decades, the Flemish wave continues to surprise the audi- ence, more recently with theatrical concerts designed by Josse De Pauw (1952), among which the piece An Old Monk stands out. This creation, renewing the rela- tionship between theater, music, word and dance, comes from an artistic encoun- ter between Pauw and the extraordinary pianist, Kris Defoort (1959), composer, improviser, and a member of several musical collectives - KD’s Basement party; KD’s Decade; d’Octurn; Dreamtime; Sound Plaza - and contributor to contempo- rary jazz groups. Defoort shares the conception of the show and also the stage with De Pauw. There are two other musicians, Nicolas Thys (bass) and Lander Gyselinck (drums). Although considered by critics as a leader of the musical van- guard, Defoort prefers to define himself in terms of today’s music: traversed and penetrated by all kinds of music, especially classical music and jazz. His compo- sitions therefore originate in a heterogeneous musical cosmos, which prevents, according to him, framing his creations in a specific musical style. If, on the one hand, the partnership with Defoort is definitive for the implementa- tion of An Old Monk, on the other hand, this artistic project is rooted in questions stemming from De Pauw’s personal issues. Indeed, the show’s title itself demon- strates this in its ambiguity. “Monk” is not only a reference to the American pianist and jazz musician Thelonious Monk (1917-1982), whose repertoire runs through the spectacle. “Monk” also refers to De Pauw himself, his old dream for a monastic life, a peaceful existence. An Old Monk also reflects a particular desire of De Pauw’s to return to dance according to life’s natural transformations. But before delving into this issue, we need to review, somewhat, the artistic career of this Flemish artist who is today considered one of the greatest creators of the contemporary European scene and who, for his lifetime achievement, won the prestigious Berna- dette Abrate award, given by Belgian Francophone critics in 2012. The will for experimentation and innovation is already well apparent at the begin- ning of Josse De Pauw’s artistic career. Trained as an actor at the Royal Conser- vatory of Brussels in 1976, he refused to participate in large productions or join traditional theatrical institutions. He sought out a new theater, open and popular, where the relationship between the artists would not be hierarchical. Thus arose the Radeis International (1976-1984), founded in partnership with Dirk Pauwels ARJ | Brazil | V. 3, n. 1 | p. 171-181 | Jan. / June 2016 ISAACSSON | The Old Monk 173 (now Victoria) and Pat Van Hemelrijck (now Alibi). Newspaper critics at the time characterized the group’s staging as poetic, comic and essentially visual. A scene without words whose silence is only interrupted sometimes by whispered gibberish and screams. Hilarious characters, innocent actions, mime neutrality, a perfor- mance reminiscent of Tati, Keaton and Chaplin. A scenic game constructed amid a diversity of objects arranged haphazardly, seemingly assembled randomly. The absence of hierarchy within the relationship between group members also deter- mined the scenic arrangement. Diving into a microcosm, the characters are ordi- nary men, anonymous subjects. No compromise with realism. Bread is green, eggs and coffee are red. An orange balloon represents the sun; the plastic floor is the beach and the sea. With no psychological construct and neutral facial expression, the interest lies in the composition of the figures. In describing the proposal of Ik wist niet dat Engeland zo mooi (I did not know that England was so beautiful, 1980), the critic Théodore Louis remembers: They introduce themselves one by one in silence, on a stage cluttered with bags and disparate objects. The first remains still, not looking at anything in particular, the second comes in with a bouquet of flowers and starts to take the petals off, the third carries two bags and a fishing rod… (Louis, 1980 n.p.). In an absolutely everyday universe, the actions are banal, devoid of any appar- ent purpose, the conversation with the objects is useless, as useless as any other murmur issued on the scene. The absurd logic metaphorically denounces human attempts to escape from facing the world. And the audience laughs, laughs at it- self, because it recognized itself. The tragic comedy is established. The Radeis’ productions gain public and critical prestige, ending up crossing Bel- gium’s borders. The group goes on international tours, where its productions are appreciated in different European countries and in the cities of Vancouver, Los Angeles, Caracas and Hong Kong. According to historians, Radeis is even the first Belgian group to conquer an international career without subsidy. Despite this success, the group dissolves eight years after its founding, with no disagreement between its members, only the common desire for change. De Pauw then began a solo, but not solitary career. He had working partnerships ISAACSSON | The Old Monk ARJ | Brazil | V. 3, n. 1 | p. 171-181 | Jan. / June 2016 174 ISSN 2357-9978 with many artists, individuals with diverse skills, actors, directors, musicians, vi- sual artists, authors, developing projects associated with different organizations, theater groups, cultural centers, vocal collectives and orchestras, among which, in recent years, the LOD musical theater of Ghent, Muziektheater Tranparant and Tonnelhuis Antwerp, KVS and Théâtre National in Brussels. De Pauw expands his extraordinary talent in different areas: theater, cinema and literature. Working in four languages - Dutch, French, English and German - he builds an acting career in theater as well as film. His curriculum at this time counts with over a hun- dred theatrical pieces and more than fifty films. As a stage actor, his performance has been appreciated on personal projects and also in important directors’ cre- ations, especially in productions directed by Guy Cassiers such as Mephisto for ever (2007), Sous le Volcan (2009), Coeur tenebreux (2011). His stage presence in Mephisto for ever, in the role of Gros (a fascist general), was so impressive that Fabiane Darge, special envoy of the French newspaper Le Monde at the Festival d’Avignon, likened his performance to that of Marlon Brando in the filmApocalypse Now (Darge, 2007 np). For De Pauw, desire is the engine of all things, what motivates life as well as art. His great desire is to act. For him, work is not only a way of life, but the best way to live indeed. Life is complex, and thus art operates with according complexity. On stage, De Pauw invests in uncertainty, the ambiguity between me and him, actor and character in a active play conjugated by sincerity and distance, which allows him, he says, the freedom to be sometimes a spectator among other spectators, in order to get closer to them. In fact, he does not think it possible to separate the actor from the character: The hardest thing for an actor is to understand the character that one is to interpret says a lot about oneself. An actor can only represent himself; every role he plays is a part of him. Nothing human is foreign to him, a reality that is sometimes hard to bear (De Pauw, 1996, np). A physically corpulent actor, on stage De Pauw gives a measured performance, with few movements and contained gestures. In La Version Claus (2009), he re- mained immobile during almost the entire polyphonic monologue, composed of fragments of plays by Hugo Claus, as well as excerpts from the Belgian writer’s ARJ | Brazil | V. 3, n. 1 | p. 171-181 | Jan. / June 2016 ISAACSSON | The Old Monk 175 interviews. The specialized critics characterized De Pauw’s acting by highlighting its lack of technical virtuosity, its simplicity and the near absence of role charac- terization (minimum body changes, refusal to use makeup and the frequent use of neutral suits as costumes).